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The Next Hacking Frontier: Your Brain?

Discussions related to the physiological and psychological effects of peak oil on our members and future generations.

The Next Hacking Frontier: Your Brain?

Unread postby Carlhole » Wed 15 Jul 2009, 11:56:22

The Next Hacking Frontier

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Wired', 'S')ome might question why anyone would want to hack into someone else’s brain, but the researchers say there’s a precedent for using computers to cause neurological harm. In November 2007 and March 2008, malicious programmers vandalized epilepsy support websites by putting up flashing animations, which caused seizures in some photo-sensitive patients.

“It happened on two separate occasions,” said computer science graduate student Tamara Denning, a co-author on the paper. “It’s evidence that people will be malicious and try to compromise peoples’ health using computers, especially if neural devices become more widespread.”

In some cases, patients might even want to hack into their own neural device. Unlike devices to control prosthetic limbs, which still use wires, many deep brain stimulators already rely on wireless signals. Hacking into these devices could enable patients to “self-prescribe” elevated moods or pain relief by increasing the activity of the brain’s reward centers.


Image

Mmmmm...reward centers.
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Re: The Next Hacking Frontier: Your Brain?

Unread postby ian807 » Wed 15 Jul 2009, 14:13:47

Anyone hacking my brain is going be sadly disappointed.
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Re: The Next Hacking Frontier: Your Brain?

Unread postby mrobert » Wed 15 Jul 2009, 16:09:29

Hacking into people's brain, would revolutionize the porn industry.
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Re: The Next Hacking Frontier: Your Brain?

Unread postby vision-master » Wed 15 Jul 2009, 16:23:05

People brains are already hacked into, it called TV. :P
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Re: The Next Hacking Frontier: Your Brain?

Unread postby lowem » Thu 16 Jul 2009, 04:48:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('vision-master', 'P')eople brains are already hacked into, it called TV. :P


Pull the plug. Create an air gap. The last word in firewall technology :)
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Re: The Next Hacking Frontier: Your Brain?

Unread postby bodigami » Thu 16 Jul 2009, 09:39:01

my mind is unhackable, it has walls of the 5 elements (including emptyness... lol, that one confuse my enemies most of da time)... that could be 8 (star of lakshmi + dharma shakra) :twisted: :)
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Re: The Next Hacking Frontier: Your Brain?

Unread postby paimei01 » Mon 20 Jul 2009, 05:33:33

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid ... =dumb+down
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hile parents, schools, provinces and states across North America bicker about the democratic process of running public schools, forces are manipulating education from behind the scenes. Major international players are reshaping public education to suit their own self-serving agendas, without regard for the wants of parents and the welfare of their children. This video lecture documents how today's educational system dumb down kids deliberately, making zombie-like people who don't ask any questions but just follow orders


http://www.ascentofhumanity.com/chapter5-6.php
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')School is the cheapest police.
-- Horace Mann

But who can unlearn all the facts that I've learned
As I sat in their chairs and my synapses burned
And the torture of chalk dust collects on my tongue
Thoughts follow my vision and dance in the sun
All my vasoconstrictors they come slowly undone
Can't this wait till I'm old? Can't I live while I'm young?
-- Phish


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')efore forced schooling, in 1840, literacy rates in New England approached 100 percent, and the popular best-sellers of the time included books the likes of Herman Melville, James Fenimore Cooper, and Ralph Waldo Emerson—all bought by a population consisting mostly of small farmers. Have you ever sat yourself down for a relaxing afternoon with a little leisurely reading—a thirty-page long Emerson essay loaded with Greek mythological allusions, complex sentences with multiple nested appositive phrases and dependent clauses, intricate logic, and a vocabulary that would challenge most graduate students today? I find I can only access early 19th century literature with a great effort at concentration. My attention wanders, I lose the train of the argument, and soon find myself passing my eyeballs over the page, uncomprehendingly.

John Taylor Gatto observes: "In 1882, fifth graders read these authors in their Appleton School Reader: William Shakespeare, Henry Thoreau, George Washington, Sir Walter Scott, Mark Twain, Benjamin Franklin, Oliver Wendell Holmes, John Bunyan, Daniel Webster, Samuel Johnson, Lewis Carroll, Thomas Jefferson, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and others like them." Today, no more than twenty percent of my college students understand the Thomas Jefferson passage quoted in Chapter Four of this book. As for fifth graders, their texts consist mostly of short declarative sentences using simplified vocabulary. A recent trend is the reissue of children's classics such as Little Women or The Wind in the Willows in special dumbed-down editions.[25] Few children these days have the reading ability to handle Treasure Island, and Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, once a staple of high school English, is off the curriculum because children no longer have the attention spans to understand it


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]Not only does school prepare us to submit to the trivialized, demeaning, dull, and unfulfilling jobs that dominate our economy to the present time, not only does it prepare us to be modern producers, it equally prepares us to be modern consumers. Consider Gatto's description:

Schools train individuals to respond as a mass. Boys and girls are drilled in being bored, frightened, envious, emotionally needy, generally incomplete. A successful mass production economy requires such a clientele. A small business, small farm economy like that of the Amish requires individual competence, thoughtfulness, compassion, and universal participation; our own requires a managed mass of leveled, spiritless, anxious, familyless, friendless, godless, and obedient people who believe the difference between "Cheers" and "Seinfeld" is worth arguing about.


Wouldn't it be better to somehow condition people from childhood to accept, and even to desire, work that was partial, trivial, mechanical, dull, repetitive, and unchallenging to thought or creativity?

Is this description already reminding you of school? Where learning arises not from curiosity but from authority's agenda; where achievement is adjudged by external standards; where human beings, like so many objects, are numbered, "class"ified, and "graded"; where knowledge is reduced to answers, right and wrong; where children are confined to a classroom or desk except when authority allows them "recess" or a pass; where problems are solved by following teacher's instructions; where free speech and free assembly are suspended—where, indeed, there are no freedoms at all but only privileges; where bells condition us to follow a regular external schedule; where fraternization is surreptitious (as my teacher once said, "You are not here to socialize!"); where none outside the hierarchical structure of authority have the power to make or change rules; where we must accept the tasks given us; where work is arbitrary and meaningless except for what external reward it brings; where resistance is proved futile in the face of a near-omniscient, omnipotent central authority. . . what better preparation for adult confinement to offices and factories could there be?
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One day there will be so many houses, that people will be bored and will go live in tents. "Why are you living in tents ? Are there not enough homes ?" "Yes there are, but we play this Economy game". Now it's "Crisis" time !Too many houses! Yes, we are insane!
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Re: The Next Hacking Frontier: Your Brain?

Unread postby bodigami » Mon 20 Jul 2009, 16:57:40

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('paimei01', '(')...)

Wouldn't it be better to somehow condition people from childhood to accept, and even to desire, work that was partial, trivial, mechanical, dull, repetitive, and unchallenging to thought or creativity?

Is this description already reminding you of school? Where learning arises not from curiosity but from authority's agenda; where achievement is adjudged by external standards; where human beings, like so many objects, are numbered, "class"ified, and "graded"; where knowledge is reduced to answers, right and wrong; where children are confined to a classroom or desk except when authority allows them "recess" or a pass; where problems are solved by following teacher's instructions; where free speech and free assembly are suspended—where, indeed, there are no freedoms at all but only privileges; where bells condition us to follow a regular external schedule; where fraternization is surreptitious (as my teacher once said, "You are not here to socialize!"); where none outside the hierarchical structure of authority have the power to make or change rules; where we must accept the tasks given us; where work is arbitrary and meaningless except for what external reward it brings; where resistance is proved futile in the face of a near-omniscient, omnipotent central authority. . . what better preparation for adult confinement to offices and factories could there be?


...and University is no exception.
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Re: The Next Hacking Frontier: Your Brain?

Unread postby AgentR » Mon 20 Jul 2009, 17:18:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') find I can only access early 19th century literature with a great effort at concentration. My attention wanders, I lose the train of the argument, and soon find myself passing my eyeballs over the page, uncomprehendingly..


What I find more illuminating are the letters of the period from normal people. They spent time considering the language and choice of words; how best to express their intentions. Someone having trouble "accessing" this material is doing it to themselves. In our modern experience, our intellectual efforts are consumed in a barrage of ten to fifteen second, explosive, argumentative quips. There is no desire to simply read or listen for an hour or two, and then, if warranted, spend a few hours composing a response in the form of a letter to a spouse or friend to explore objections and agreements.

What I suspect often, when I hear or read of people having difficulties with some material, is I think they are wishing they were approaching the material, the way someone who has read it several dozen times and spends much of the time annotating their copy, or pondering some passage that strikes them as particularly meaningful. They completely forget the readers first few adventures with the text, where they simply read it during a hot, lazy afternoon; unconcerned with whether they absorbed every last detail, nor disturbed if they happened to doze off for a peaceful nap.

Do you think Emerson would be offended to see a middle aged farmer on his porch on some hot afternoon, asleep, with his thumb stuck into a book marking where he had stopped reading?
Yes, we are. As we are.
And so shall we remain; Until the end.
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Re: The Next Hacking Frontier: Your Brain?

Unread postby bodigami » Tue 21 Jul 2009, 00:51:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AgentR', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') find I can only access early 19th century literature with a great effort at concentration. My attention wanders, I lose the train of the argument, and soon find myself passing my eyeballs over the page, uncomprehendingly..


What I find more illuminating are the letters of the period from normal people. They spent time considering the language and choice of words; how best to express their intentions. Someone having trouble "accessing" this material is doing it to themselves. In our modern experience, our intellectual efforts are consumed in a barrage of ten to fifteen second, explosive, argumentative quips. There is no desire to simply read or listen for an hour or two, and then, if warranted, spend a few hours composing a response in the form of a letter to a spouse or friend to explore objections and agreements.

What I suspect often, when I hear or read of people having difficulties with some material, is I think they are wishing they were approaching the material, the way someone who has read it several dozen times and spends much of the time annotating their copy, or pondering some passage that strikes them as particularly meaningful. They completely forget the readers first few adventures with the text, where they simply read it during a hot, lazy afternoon; unconcerned with whether they absorbed every last detail, nor disturbed if they happened to doze off for a peaceful nap.

Do you think Emerson would be offended to see a middle aged farmer on his porch on some hot afternoon, asleep, with his thumb stuck into a book marking where he had stopped reading?


The Computer is both the best and worst invention ever. It made the book seemed obsolete by most people, but it is one of the best ways of archiving knowledge... I love books... but I love having meaningful conversations with people with trees (a forrest) as witnesses.
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Re: The Next Hacking Frontier: Your Brain?

Unread postby lowem » Tue 21 Jul 2009, 06:18:52

Actually, a lot of this brain-hacking stuff has been looked at in anime such as Ghost in the Shell, they've got about 2 movies and 2 seasons of TV series going over the years. Of course that's assuming that we do reach such a level of technological sophistication.
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Re: The Next Hacking Frontier: Your Brain?

Unread postby bodigami » Tue 21 Jul 2009, 10:08:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('lowem', 'A')ctually, a lot of this brain-hacking stuff has been looked at in anime such as Ghost in the Shell, they've got about 2 movies and 2 seasons of TV series going over the years. Of course that's assuming that we do reach such a level of technological sophistication.


Puppet Master indeed... it is 3 movies. Japan probably has thermal camouflage by now. GiTS is sci fi based on facts and extrapolations.

Hack .this 8) the actor of Neo in Matrix is Buddhist. Constantine is a great movie too... but i prefer the Animatrix in japanese... Buddhism Zen is quite brandable actually. Steve Jobs is also a buddhist.
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Re: The Next Hacking Frontier: Your Brain?

Unread postby vision-master » Tue 21 Jul 2009, 10:52:20

Fibonacci Numbers and Computer Algorithms

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')The Fibonacci Sequence describes a vast array of phenomena from nature. Computer scientists have discovered and used many algorithms which can be classified as applications of Fibonacci's sequence. In this article, several of these applications are considered. (PK)


Image
A Fibonacci spiral created by drawing arcs connecting the opposite corners of squares in the Fibonacci tiling; this one uses squares of sizes 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, and 34; see Golden spiral
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